Screenshot of Fiber - INTEGRATION tool built with OpenClaw

Fiber

About Fiber

Fiber provides a specialized integration platform offering a comprehensive suite of search APIs tailored for AI agents. This service focuses on delivering critical professional data, including information on individuals, companies, and job listings, alongside verified contact details. Designed with agent usability in mind, Fiber facilitates the seamless programmatic access to external data essential for various automated processes and intelligent applications. Its core strength lies in empowering AI systems to access and utilize up-to-date, relevant professional intelligence for enhanced operational efficiency. The platform supports diverse enrichment workflows, allowing AI agents to not only retrieve specific data points but also to integrate this information into broader analytical frameworks. Whether an AI agent needs to automate lead generation, conduct market research, or streamline recruitment processes, Fiber offers the foundational data infrastructure. By providing access to verified contacts and detailed organizational insights, Fiber enables AI agents to make more informed decisions and execute tasks with greater precision. This makes it a valuable resource for developers and organizations building sophisticated AI agents that require reliable and expansive professional data access.

Key Features

  • Search APIs for programmatic data access
  • Capability to search for people data
  • Capability to search for company data
  • Capability to search for job listings
  • Access to verified contact information
  • Support for data enrichment workflows
  • Designed for usability by AI agents

Use Cases

  1. AI agents automating lead generation and sales outreach with verified contacts

  2. Recruitment AI systems identifying potential candidates and company roles

  3. Automated market research platforms gathering industry and company intelligence

  4. Data enrichment processes for existing CRMs or HR databases

  5. Building intelligent applications that require real-time professional data

/// REVIEW GUIDE

How to evaluate Fiber

Fiber is listed in the Integrations category of the ClawSites directory. Use this page as a starting point for judging whether the tool fits a real OpenClaw or AI agent workflow. The listing summary says: Fiber provides a specialized integration platform offering a comprehensive suite of search APIs tailored for AI agents. This service focuses on delivering critical professional data, including information on individuals, companies, and job listings, alongside verified contact details. Designed with agent usability in mind, Fiber facilitates the seamless programmatic access to external data essential for various automated processes and intelligent applications. Its core strength lies in empowering AI systems to access and utilize up-to-date, relevant professional intelligence for enhanced operational efficiency. The platform supports diverse enrichment workflows, allowing AI agents to not only retrieve specific data points but also to integrate this information into broader analytical frameworks. Whether an AI agent needs to automate lead generation, conduct market research, or streamline recruitment processes, Fiber offers the foundational data infrastructure. By providing access to verified contacts and detailed organizational insights, Fiber enables AI agents to make more informed decisions and execute tasks with greater precision. This makes it a valuable resource for developers and organizations building sophisticated AI agents that require reliable and expansive professional data access.

Treat the public website at fiber.ai as the source of truth for setup details, pricing, account requirements, and current availability. ClawSites can help you discover and compare options, but the final decision should come from testing the tool with a narrow workflow, low-risk data, and a clear review step.

The most important question is whether Fiber can move a task from input to useful output while keeping the operator in control. For agent tools, control means knowing what data the tool can access, what actions it can take, what it logs, and how a person can stop or correct it.

Workflow fit

Fiber should be evaluated against a specific integrations job, not just a broad agent-tool label.

Setup effort

Check whether the tool needs an account, API key, local runner, browser access, or messaging channel before it can produce useful output.

Human review

Prefer a setup where a person can inspect inputs, approve risky actions, and correct outputs before the tool touches production work.

Evidence trail

Look for logs, screenshots, citations, status history, or other artifacts that make agent work explainable after the fact.

CategoryIntegrations
Pricing signalPaid
Status signalonline
Structured detailsThis listing includes additional feature, use-case, or tag context.

A practical first test for Fiber is to choose one task, write down the expected result, and run the tool without giving it more access than that task requires. If the result is useful, repeat the same test with a slightly messier input. If the tool still produces traceable output and makes failures visible, it is a stronger candidate for a larger workflow.

Compare Fiber with other tools in the Integrations category when you need to understand tradeoffs. One tool may be better for a quick prototype, another for team permissions, another for local control, and another for polished reporting. The right choice depends on the workflow boundary, not on a single popularity score.

Comparison questions

Start by comparing Fiber against the manual version of the same task. If the current workflow is already fast, clear, and low-risk, an agent tool needs to save enough review time to justify the extra setup. If the current workflow depends on copying information between tabs, checking the same sources repeatedly, or waiting for a teammate to prepare context, the tool may have a stronger case.

Next, decide what a bad result would cost. Some integrations workflows are easy to reverse because the output is a draft, note, table, or research summary. Others touch customer communication, public publishing, credentials, production data, or paid actions. Use Fiber first where mistakes are visible and reversible, then raise the access level only after the tool proves it can fail clearly.

Check whether the output fits the place where your team already works. A useful tool should make the next step easier, whether that means a clean export, a shareable link, a saved transcript, a pull request, a ticket, a message draft, or a report that someone can review. If the result has to be rewritten before it can be used, the time savings may disappear.

Finally, define the success metric before the test starts. For Fiber, a fair metric might be minutes saved, fewer handoffs, better source coverage, faster first draft quality, easier status tracking, or fewer repeated checks. A simple scorecard keeps the decision grounded and makes it easier to compare this listing with other tools in the ClawSites directory.

Directory notes versus official details

Use ClawSites to understand where Fiber sits in the broader agent-tool landscape, then use fiber.ai to confirm the current product facts. Directory pages are useful for discovery, comparison, and workflow framing. Official product pages are the better place to verify supported platforms, account limits, security documentation, pricing pages, trial terms, and release notes.

If you are building a stack around OpenClaw or another agent runner, keep a short evaluation note with the date tested, the workflow tested, the access granted, and the result. Agent tools can change quickly, and a note from the first evaluation helps future reviewers understand why Fiber was accepted, rejected, or kept as a backup option.

Re-check the listing when the workflow changes. A tool that is a poor fit for fully autonomous execution may still be useful for assisted research, drafting, monitoring, triage, or QA. A tool that works well for one user may need more review gates before it fits a team process. The strongest evaluation is specific to the job, the data, and the person responsible for approval.

Keep the first evaluation note short but concrete: the date tested, the account or dataset used, the task attempted, the output reviewed, and the reason the tool did or did not move forward. That record is useful when Fiber changes its onboarding, pricing, documentation, integration surface, or safety controls. It also helps future reviewers understand whether the listing is a daily workflow candidate, a narrow utility, or an interesting tool to revisit later.

Adoption checklist

Before adopting Fiber, document the exact task it will handle and the system that remains responsible for final approval. For example, a tool can gather research, draft a response, or prepare a report, while a person still approves publication, spending, deletion, or access changes. Writing that boundary down prevents a useful helper from becoming an unclear automation risk.

Confirm what data the tool needs and whether that data can be safely shared. Many agent workflows start with harmless public pages and later expand into private documents, customer records, inboxes, analytics, or billing systems. A careful rollout keeps the first test small, limits credentials, and expands access only after the tool has shown consistent behavior.

Check how Fiber behaves when the input is incomplete. A reliable AI agent tool should ask for clarification, skip unsafe steps, or produce a clearly marked partial result instead of pretending that every task succeeded. This is especially important for integrations workflows where bad assumptions can create duplicated work or misleading status updates.

Keep a comparison note while testing. Record the setup time, output quality, review effort, failure mode, and whether the tool saved enough time to justify adding it to your stack. That note makes it easier to compare Fiber against other ClawSites listings and decide whether it belongs in a daily workflow, a one-off experiment, or a future watchlist.

Also decide who owns the follow-up review. A listing can look useful today and become stale when the product changes its permissions, model provider support, onboarding flow, or pricing. If Fiber becomes part of a recurring workflow, assign a simple retest date and keep the official source link in the decision note so future users can confirm the facts before expanding access.

If the follow-up owner is unclear, keep Fiber in discovery mode. A tool should not receive broader access until someone can explain when it will be checked again and what evidence would justify continued use.

Start small

Run the tool on one low-risk task before connecting sensitive accounts, payment systems, or production data.

Keep review visible

Use a workflow where a human can inspect the result, understand the source context, and stop the next action if needed.

Revisit regularly

Agent tools change quickly, so re-check pricing, permissions, documentation, and output quality after major updates.

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